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The effect of co-administered flavonoids on the metabolism of hesperetin and the disposition of its metabolites in Caco-2 cell monolayers

✍ Scribed by Walter Brand; Beatriz Padilla; Peter J. van Bladeren; Gary Williamson; Ivonne M. C. M. Rietjens


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
303 KB
Volume
54
Category
Article
ISSN
1613-4125

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Metabolism by phase II enzymes and transport from intestinal cells back into the lumen by ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters limits the bioavailability of the flavanone hesperetin, the aglycone of hesperidin. This study investigates to what extent other flavonoids modulate the metabolism and transport of hesperetin by characterizing the effect of co‐administrating a series of flavonoids using Caco‐2 cell monolayers in a two‐compartment transwell system. Flavonoids may interfere with hesperetin metabolism and can also inhibit the apically located ABC transporter breast cancer resistance protein (ABCG2) which was previously shown to be responsible for the apical transport of hesperetin metabolites. Co‐exposure of Caco‐2 cell monolayers to hesperetin with specific flavonoids reduced the ratio of apical efflux to basolateral transport of hesperetin metabolites, and in some cases, also reduced the amount of hesperetin metabolites detected extracellularly. As intracellular accumulation of hesperetin metabolites did not account for this decrease, inhibition of metabolism of hesperetin is likely the underlying mechanism for the reduced metabolite formation and excretion. In spite of the reduction in metabolism the amount of hesperetin metabolites transported to the basolateral side significantly increased upon co‐exposure with specific flavonoids and therefore co‐administration of specific flavonoids could be a strategy to improve the bioavailability of hesperetin.


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